November 3, 2011 — The commander-in-chief, President Barack Obama, donned the jacket for a different type of commander while meeting with the astronauts who flew NASA's final space shuttle mission inside the Oval Office at the White House on Tuesday (Nov. 1).

STS-135 mission commander Chris Ferguson, pilot Doug Hurley, Sandra Magnus and Rex Walheim, both mission specialists, together with flight operations director and astronaut Janet Kavandi presented the President with his very own blue flight jacket. NASA astronauts have worn the same style jacket for decades when they trained in T-38 supersonic jets.

The front of the jacket was adorned with an additional three missions' patches, as well as the NASA insignia. Below the agency's emblem on the right chest was the STS-104 patch, the 105th shuttle mission and Kavandi's third and final flight.

On the left chest were the patches for STS-31 and STS-134. The earlier, sewn at top, represented the mission that deployed the Hubble Space Telescope. STS-31 was piloted by Charles Bolden, who Obama appointed as NASA Administrator.

STS-134, the second-to-last mission of the shuttle program and the final flight for orbiter Endeavour was commanded by Mark Kelly. Obama reached out to Kelly in January after the astronaut's wife, Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, was shot.

Rounding out the jacket's accessories were a lapel pin displaying NASA's shuttle program commemorative logo and a name tag. The Velcro-attached black tag was inscribed in gold letters:

BARACK OBAMA

President of the United States of America

Obama is not the first president to be gifted with an astronaut jacket. In 1988, the crew of STS-26, which returned the space shuttle to flight after the loss of orbiter Challenger, gave President Ronald Reagan a similar coat decorated with patches that flew on the shuttle Discovery mission.

On both occasions, the astronauts were dressed more like a president, foregoing their royal blue jackets for business suits.